List of Contributors

Terence J. Anderson is Professor Emeritus, University of Miami School of Law, co-author (with William Twining) of Analysis of Evidence (1991, 1998) and co-author of “Wigmore Meets the Last Wedge” (Evidence and Inference in Law and History, Twining and Hampshire-Monk, eds. 2003).

Peter Bray is an AHRC Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Research Laboratory for Archaeology (RLAHA), University of Oxford. He has degrees from the Universities of Bradford and Oxford, and is a Junior Research Fellow at Linacre College.

Robert Chapman is Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the University of Reading, with research interests including human inequalities and historical materialist approaches to archaeology. His publications include The Archaeology of Death (1981), Emerging Complexity (1990) and Archaeologies of Complexity (2003).

Marcos Llobera (DPhil 1999 Oxon) is a landscape archaeologist. His main research interests are the development of computational models in archaeology (more broadly the development of archaeological information science), the design of new methods for landscape analysis and the relation between archaeological practice and theory.

Gavin Lucas is a Professor of Archaeology at the University of Iceland. His main research interests lie in archaeological method and theory and the archaeology of the modern world. His most recent book was Understanding the Archaeological Record (2012).

Sturt W. Manning is currently Goldwin Smith Professor of Classical Archaeology, Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies, and Director of the Malcolm and Carolyn Wiener Laboratory for Aegean and Near Eastern Dendrochronology, Cornell University.

Nola Markey is a cultural anthropologist and archaeologist based in Kamloops BC. Her experience includes project management of a variety of archaeological assessments, environmental assessments, and community-based Aboriginal traditional use studies in British Columbia, the Yukon and Ontario. She is also an archaeological BC provincially certified Resource Inventory Standards Committee (RISC) course instructor. Nola is Saulteaux and is a member of the O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation, Crane River, Manitoba.

Chapter 16. Traditional Knowledge, Archaeological Evidence, and Other Ways of KnowingEmail: markey.nola@gmail.comGeorge Nicholas is a professor of Archaeology at Simon Fraser University, and Director of the Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) project, He was the founding director of SFU's Indigenous Archaeology Program in Kamloops, BC. His research focuses on Indigenous peoples and archaeology, intangible heritage, the archaeology and human ecology of wetlands, and archaeological theory.